The School of Greatness - The Biggest Myths about Relationships w/DeVon Franklin EP 1106
Episode Date: May 5, 2021“Love expands when our capacity to accept each other expands.”Today's guest is DeVon Franklin, who is an award-winning producer, New York Times best-selling author and renowned motivational speake...r committed to inspiring people around the world through entertainment. He’s written a new book called, LIVE FREE: Exceed Your Highest Expectations. DeVon has be on the show a few times, so make sure to visit the show notes if you enjoy this, but each time we sit down, it’s always an incredibly powerful conversation.In this episode Lewis and DeVon discuss the biggest myths about marriage, the truth about expectations in relationships, the 3 questions you should ask the person you’re dating to know if they are right for you, and so much more!For more got to: www.lewishowes.com/1106DeVon's other episode: www.lewishowes.com/769Check out his website: www.devonfranklin.comCheck out his book: www.devonfranklin.com/live-free/The Power of Erotic Intelligence with Esther Perel: https://link.chtbl.com/732-podFind Lasting Love with Matthew Hussey: https://link.chtbl.com/811-pod
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This is episode number 1,106 with New York Times bestselling author Devon Franklin.
Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned
lifestyle entrepreneur. And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Robert Morley said,
To fall in love with yourself is the first secret to happiness.
And Helen Keller said,
The best and most beautiful things in this world cannot be seen or even heard.
They must be felt with the heart.
My guest today is my friend Devon Franklin, who is an award-winning producer, New York
Times bestselling author, and renowned motivational speaker committed to inspiring people around
the world through entertainment.
He's written a new book called Live Free, and it is powerful.
It's all about exceeding your highest expectations.
And I've had Devon on my show a few times before, and they've all been inspiring episodes.
So make sure to check them out
in the show notes of this episode.
But each time we sit down,
it's always an incredible and powerful conversation.
And this one is going to blow you away
because in this episode,
we discuss the biggest myths about marriage.
And I have Devon open up and share
and reveal things about his marriage that he's struggling with.
The truth about expectations in relationships.
The three questions you should ask the person you're dating to know if they are right for you long term.
Ooh, these are juicy questions.
We also talk about why we often stay in the wrong relationships for too long.
The importance of showing up and loving ourselves.
And so much more.
If you're enjoying this, if you're getting value out of this, then make sure to share this with
someone who needs to hear it, who would be inspired, and start a conversation of improvement
and greatness with a friend in your life. Post it on social media as well. You can copy and paste
this link wherever you're listening to this episode, or you can use the link lewishouse.com
slash 1106 and share that to your friends via text, social media,
anywhere online you can think of. And make sure to subscribe to the School of Greatness on Apple
Podcasts or Spotify. If this is your first time here and you want to be inspired by great minds
in the future, then subscribe right now. Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Devon Franklin.
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That's M-O-N-D-A-Y.com for your free two-week trial visit monday.com that's m-o-n-d-a-y.com for your free two-week trial welcome back everyone to the school of greatness podcast we got my man
devon franklin in the house what's up my brother so good to see you yeah man uh you are you're just
a symbol of inspiration and truth and life for so many people.
And you really inspire people, not only with your career and the business sense and the producing and the entertainment world, but also in the relationship side of things.
And this is what I know you as and respect you as the most.
Wow.
And I know you've been married almost a decade now.
Yes.
decade now. Yes. And there are probably things you learned the first couple of years of marriage versus the last couple of years of marriage, especially during a pandemic and during trying
hard times. Yes. What is the biggest lesson you learned about marriage and relationships,
being in a committed relationship during an extremely adverse time of the world. What's the biggest lesson for you?
How much time you got?
Bro, listen, I've learned so much, right?
But here's the number one thing that I've learned.
We have been sold a myth.
Ooh, what is that myth?
That love heals all.
You know, marriage is the answer.
Like, if you're not married, there's something wrong with you.
Like, you've got to be in a relationship.
Like, we've been sold a myth.
And here's what I mean about the myth.
We have held marriage up.
Like, it's the top of the mountain.
And when you get there there all of your problems
are answered and gone that's not true it's not true and that that i because you know from from
being you know from a kid we're watching movies we're watching television shows we're listening
to music it's all about love it's all about finding it it's all about getting to that mountain of oh when i find the one then i can relax no marriage is like getting to the beginning of the
mountain oh man base camp base camp and guess what a summit is and guess what that altitude is steep
it's high it's hard to breathe it's hard to breathe up there. It's jagged. It's not a smooth ride. That's what marriage is. And so, you know, understanding, you know, and coming into the myth of it, it's like, oh, God, I love my wife. She loves me. The union is great. Yet we got work to do. And until we do our work, the union itself can't subsidize it.
And so that myth that marriage is the answer was one of the myths that I, you know, came completely directly had to confront.
And what I realized. When did you confront at what what year in the marriage or what day
you know you know what it was is that it was gradual you know it was gradual for me you know
and part of that gradual revelation was looking for the marriage to bring me a certain level of fulfillment that I was not actually pursuing on my own.
So so don't get me wrong. Yes, marriage is great. Love is great. It can be fulfilling.
However, if we are not actually doing our work and finding out what makes us happy, what makes us fulfilled.
finding out what makes us happy, what makes us fulfilled,
and we're relying on the union to do that,
we ultimately find ourselves becoming manipulators.
To get what we want.
To get what we want.
Because we expect that that person or the relationship is supposed to provide us something.
Exactly.
What is the relationship supposed to provide us? Here's what I believe a
great relationship provides, right? One, first and foremost, you know, let's look at it for a
minute like a business, right? So, you know, if you have a business and you have a partner,
what makes a great partnership? When both bring something to it, right? Because you have a
partner. Yeah. If your partner is just taking everything
and not adding value to the business,
you're like, why is this person making money?
There you go.
Why am I paying back into this person?
There you go.
So when you look at it that way,
you know, the purpose of a relationship
is both people making a contribution
so that that contribution enriches the lives of both.
Right. So I'm bringing something. You're bringing something. Now we both, you know, our happiness, our joy is enhanced.
It's not created. This is very important. The myth is that the marriage will create your happiness.
It's not true. It can enhance it if you already have it so if you have
a partnership both people are bringing their their their contributions and then
as a result your business thrives because you have two people who are
committed here's the second part both going in the same direction right so
that related to values then or is that it's related to values? It's related to purpose. You know, I had one of my friends, you know, we were talking and they kind of gave me this visual. Right. And so I think this is it was very helpful when it came to like marriage and relationships and how to think of them.
helpful when it came to like marriage and relationships and how to think of them. So they were like, all right, so I want you to look forward, like do a visualization and I want you
to look forward. And when you look forward, I want you to see God. I said, okay. And they said,
now start walking to God. I said, great. I'm walking to God. Now they said, now your partner is right next to you. Right.
So hold their hand. Great. I'm holding their hand and now we're both walking to God. It's beautiful.
Now. Turn to your partner. And then they turn to you.
And now try to walk to God.
It's challenging.
Exactly. Side-stepping over there, you know.
Exactly.
He's like a crab or something.
Exactly.
Precisely.
So when you talk about the, you know, what is the purpose of a union?
A purpose of a union is that when you have your right purpose partner and that person is committed to you and you're committed to them and you both are heading in the same direction, you both can walk together. But when you're trying
to get somebody, you know, to a direction that they otherwise may not want to go.
They're turned the opposite way.
They're turned the opposite way or they're trying to get you where you may not want to go.
You can't get there from there. So I believe that the purpose of a relationship is one, you know, making a contribution to each other's happiness.
You know, having that partnership.
Not making the other person happy.
You cannot do it.
Contributing to the other person's happiness.
This is why I wrote the book.
This is another myth.
This idea.
How many times have you seen it in movies? How many times have you heard people say it? Oh, this person makes me happy. Oh, they make me so happy. It sounds so good to say. But what happens when you say someone makes you happy? then make you mad Okay, so then tell me who's in control of how you feel the other person exactly
So why don't victim to their there you go their their their way of being whatever their way being their mood
I don't but here's the reality no matter how much somebody loves you
They don't there's it's impossible for someone outside of us
To contribute to our happiness in a perfect way, 24 seven. So is love enough? No, no, there's love enough. No,
you can love somebody and not stand them. Right. Right. I love my wife. My wife loves me. We still
have to do our work and make the commitment to walk this thing out.
Right.
Like we still have to communicate.
We still have to understand like, oh, OK, that's your issue or that's my issue.
Right.
Like so love is great, but love is not enough.
And that's the myth.
People think like, oh, if I fall.
Love is all you need.
That's right.
All I need is love. No. It makes me feel good when I hear that. Right. But it's not oh, if I fall, that's right. All I need is love. No.
Makes me feel good when I hear that. Right. But it's not all you need.
No, you need compatibility. You need compatibility. I need compatibility. Like when you have
compatibility, when again, you talk about people going in the same direction, it's like, okay,
cool. We're committed to going in the same direction. We're committed to the same type of
life. We're committed to allowing each other to be
the full self that we were created to be.
That to me, in addition to love,
is what can make a great marriage
or make a great relationship.
But love alone, it's not enough.
There's a lot of people you love, you can't stand.
There's a lot of people you love that you broke up with.
Because you say, you know, I love them, but we're just not compatible.
And that love may never go away.
But so often we're romanticizing love in a way that it produces so much pain in those who don't have it.
As a movie producer that produces a lot of movies around faith and love and community and connection,
I'm sure there are some lines in your movies that you produce you didn't write the scripts no i didn't produce the scripts
you produce the movies that have lines like this that maybe uh remind people of this way of living
you make me happy or whatever the line is right I'm sure there's somewhere in one of your movies.
As someone who is producing certain movies for entertainment,
knowing that sometimes maybe there's a line in here and there that,
that's not really true for you or where you're at in relationships.
How do you navigate that?
Not saying it's right or wrong, but just how do you navigate that as a human,
knowing that's
coming out and that some of the entertainment right in the movies that i do i always try to
put in truth so so this point of view is something you know the movie that comes to mind uh that i
worked on when i was an executive was jumping the broom and that was a romantic comedy you know an
upper class family working class family you know get know, an upper class family, working class family, you know, get there.
The son from the working class family marries the woman, this daughter from the upper class family on a weekend wedding in Martha's Vineyard.
And Laz Alonzo and Paula Patton, you know, were in that film.
And my wife, Megan, was one of the stars of that film.
And we started dating at the premiere, you know, from the premiere about nine months after production, which was very cool. And in that movie, you know, we intentionally put, I've worked on that to make
sure we put real truth on the difficulty, right? Of like, yeah, you can, two people can love each
other, but then what do you do with their families? How do you navigate conflict? How do you navigate
an overbearing mother? How do you navigate, you know, parents who have a certain image for what
they wanted for their daughter and who their daughter's marrying doesn't align with the image?
And so that movie has a lot of truth in it. And ultimately, you know, we didn't cut corners at
all. And that's why the movie was so successful. And I'm getting ready to do another romantic
comedy and we're putting more truth in. So for me, I'm always mindful and cognizant of how I feel
and think about love. And I try to represent that when I'm doing movies that cognizant of how I feel and think about love.
And I try to represent that when I'm doing movies that are on that subject. Because I'm not trying to sell a fantasy.
I want to sell the reality in that, yes, you can win.
And yes, when you find that partner that you fall in love with,
there's going to be challenges.
And maybe more challenges of different classes or different backgrounds or cultures.
Absolutely.
I'm a big believer, whether this is true or not, that we talk about, we write, we podcast on the things that, we become experts on the things that we need the most.
Yes.
So at the School of Greatness, I talk about all subjects.
So it means I'm flawed in pretty much every area of life.
I don't believe it, but I hear you.
I'm constantly looking for more wisdom to improve, right? Yeah.
Where do you feel like in the relationship side of things that you, I think I asked you this
question last time a couple years ago, where do you feel like you still need the most improvement
in relationships for you? Yeah, so I need the most improvement in a number of areas.
Yeah. So I need the most improvement in a number of areas.
How long do we have?
Exactly. Let's be honest. I have not perfected this thing and I'm working on it every day.
And anybody that tells you they perfected it, they're going to lie about everything else.
So the first area that I'm working on and you may relate to this because of the work that you do. You know, my father passed away when I was nine years old.
You know, he passed away of a heart attack when he was 36.
And that was a very traumatic, you know,
experience for me and my brothers.
So my older brother's three and a half years older,
my younger brother's three and a half years younger.
And so coming out of that, you know,
no money, my mother didn't have money for therapy
or anything like that. And so, you know, we were in church and we watched movies. Right. And so and then also I was very active in school. And what I began to see is like, oh, OK, if I perform or achieve at a certain level, people would say, oh, Devon, good job. Right. Pat me on the back. right? So I said, oh, got it. So the more that I serve at church
or the more I achieve at school or the more that I do my chores at home, the more approval I would
get. So what I began to do was I began to seek that out and I began to become really good at
meeting everybody else's need. And so that persona, right? Of like, oh, you need something done. Give
it to Devon
right it's like oh yeah I'm your guy I can do it did it all right cuz I was
finding my value in all of the achievement and all of the approval that
came with it in my in middle school people start calling mr. perfect you
know and at first I'm like oh this is great I love that oh wow mr. perfect
right but then as I got older, it became a trap.
Why? Because I'm not perfect. No one's perfect. But I had this image that I had to live up to.
I had this expectation of myself that, oh, I've got to do everything perfectly. Right.
So getting to your question, a lot of pressure. Oh, my goodness. Are you kidding me? Exhausting. It's exhausting.
That's why I talk about in the book I had to kill Mr. Perfect. I said,
I gotta, I gotta let go of this persona because I, you know, I'm not that and I need to be who
I really am. And so when you talk about what the area I need to improve on, so, you know,
bringing that into marriage, right? Like, Hey, I'm here to serve and I'm here to be the best
husband I can be. And I'm here to give. And I'm here to sacrifice.
All that's beautiful.
But when it crosses boundaries.
But here's the boundary, though.
The problem is that no matter how altruistic you or I may want to be in our relationships with our women,
if we do not first acknowledge that we have needs right our altruism is flawed how so because we are serving in order to fill the hole
in our soul approval to get approval to there you go you're part of the bag there you go yeah
you know and then also it's like oh well i well, no, I don't have any needs.
No, I'm here to meet your needs.
No, you're human.
I'm human.
I got needs.
I think I can relate to this big time for most of my life.
Up until recently, I would do things in order to receive love in relationships.
And I would not do things.
in relationships and I would not do things if someone got upset at me I would not do those things anymore to just try to make them happy so they
would continue to love me even when it would cross my boundaries or when I
didn't agree with something I would do it to make the other person like me love
me make you know be happy with me and then I found myself resenting myself
longer that would go on because I was doing things that I didn't believe in or didn't agree with or there was a boundary of mine or was crossing my line to serve someone else.
And I think it's learning that balance probably or navigating and learning how to communicate expectations, which is a lot about in your book, which I love.
The whole book's about setting clear expectations.
Right. in your book, which I love. The whole book's about setting clear expectations and not going into a relationship with the viewpoint of,
well, this is the way a relationship's supposed to look
based on society.
Just thinking that the other person knows what you think
and you know what they think
and having that is not going to work.
It ain't going to work.
It ain't going to work.
And after nine years,
not to put your marriage on the spot or anything, but after nine years, how important is still communicating
expectations nine years into marriage? Man, it's every day, right? Oh, oh, you can't autopilot
this thing. You can't say this is what I expect one day and then it'd be good for the rest of life.
Never.
It will not work.
It won't work.
And here's why.
You know, I go back to that, our flaws, right?
We're all flawed.
Yeah.
All of us and all of us have traumas and tragedies and things that we have experienced in our
life that we have compartmentalized.
And that's why I go back to this earlier thought of like, you know, the myth that marriage is, is, is gonna, you know, it's,
it's gonna save you and it's everything. The reason why I think that's a myth is because
the more you are with somebody and the more that you love them and they love you,
the more that those flaws, fears come out, the fears come out. The trauma because of vulnerability. And you're actually sharing
your life with someone and you're allowing someone to see who you are. And there's also
certain things you don't know that you've gone through that have impacted you to the level that
they have. It's coming up now. Exactly. And so in a great relationship, it serves as a great mirror.
So when you talk about setting expectations, you know, nine years in, it doesn't stop because all of us are changing.
And also to that point, you we have to learn to communicate.
We have to get our words out. We have to say, OK, you know, hey, baby, can I expect this?
Can you expect that? Let's get to the middle so that we understand.
OK, cool. Here's what I can hold you accountable for. Here's what you can hold me accountable for instead of assuming.
And that assumption, again, no, no matter how much they love you, no matter how long you've been together, no one can read our minds.
No one. No one. No one. And so when you start behaving and then here's what happens.
And so when you start behaving and then here's what happens, dude, you, you, you, we have these unspoken expectations.
Unspoken expectations are relationship killers.
You have this unspoken expectation.
You treat the person as if you have spoken it and they know it.
And you fault them for it. And then you judge them.
You judge them when they don't meet the expectation they may not have been aware of.
And then you make a false assumption about their intent for you.
They don't care about me.
They don't love me.
There you go.
They don't think about me.
There you go.
They're selfish, whatever.
There you go.
And so in our head, we become the judge and jury over somebody.
Without even telling them.
Without even telling them.
What they were supposed
to do exactly and giving them the opportunity to say yes or no that's it that's it because too
often in relationships we're trying to control and so just because you have an expectation
it does not mean that person is obligated to meet it right that person has to agree right that person
that you're with is free the same way you're free okay and if they want to meet it. Right. That person has to agree. Right. That person that you're with is free. The same way you're free. Okay. And if they want to meet that expectation, great. And if they don't,
then you can talk about what that means. Right. Hey, okay. You know, I have a certain expectation.
Okay. That's not something you want to meet. All right. Let's talk about if we are compatible,
let's talk about if we are going in the same direction. Right. Very important. Instead,
same direction. Very important. Instead, we suppress, we allow these feelings to fester,
we get mad, we then get bitter, you know, and then we, you know, someone asks us a question,
we turn a cold shoulder. You know, it's like, well, why? Because we haven't actually communicated.
We haven't actually asked the question, hey, can I expect this from you? Is this okay? Is this all right? Is it not? Is it cool? Right? And so that's why, you know, in the book, I spend so much time talking about communicating expectations, learning to set
expectations just because they know, because they love you doesn't mean they know. And I have seen
so many relationships go by the wayside because there was this idea, this myth that, oh, just
because they love me, they're supposed to know what I want. No, they don't know.
Everybody has a different upbringing. Exactly. They were exposed to love and marriage in different
ways. And so what may look like love to somebody may look like death to somebody else. So you got
to communicate and find the happy medium of what works for your relationship. How do we learn to
love ourselves so much that it doesn't matter what our partner does or doesn't do?
Oh, man.
Lord have mercy.
Is there a way where you can fall in love with yourself without a sense of ego and like, I'm God?
But love yourself so much that it doesn't matter if your partner meets your expectations,
communicated or uncommunicated, whether they're supporting you in the way that you want or not, whether they're proud of you or not, is there a way that we could
do that? Or should we be expecting something out of our relationship in return? You know, either way.
Bro, listen, listen, man. You know, listen, my views on this may be a little contrarian so i'm just gonna speak my
truth yeah yeah um one of so i'll answer the love question in a minute of self but i want to hit the
piece that you just hit which is the expectation right yes i personally believe that if you give to get in a relationship,
you are on thin ice and the sun is coming out.
Because...
Right, right, right.
Because again, what happens is you're not free.
You're not free.
You're not actually giving from your heart because that's what you want not free. You're not free. You're not actually giving from your heart
because that's what you want to do.
You're giving from manipulation.
To get something in return.
Because it's to get something in return.
So you're treating that relationship
like the stock market, right?
Well, yeah, if I give a certain amount of money
to a certain stock or portfolio,
I can expect a certain return.
Hopefully it goes up.
Right, hopefully it goes up, right?
But that's the dynamic, you know? but relationship is not stocks, man. That's somebody's
heart. That's somebody's life. And so when you're investing in someone with the hope that they'll
do something for you, you're messed up. What if that person never contributes in the way you
contribute, let's say, after years?
Is it the right relationship still?
Should you let go of the expectation?
Well, I don't need that in return.
Great.
So here's how I think you answer that.
And I want to hit the love part too.
So I believe everyone should give freely from how they feel and want to feel.
And they give to that person because that's what's in their heart
to do. Over time, it's not an indictment on that person if that person isn't giving as much. It
just may be a revelatory about compatibility, right? It's like, oh, okay, got it. You know,
the person that's giving, right? I'm in a relationship.
You're in a relationship because you have needs.
You want those needs to be met.
Oh, okay.
I'm seeing there's an imbalance, right?
Like I feel great about everything I'm giving, but I also recognize that there's some needs that are not being met and maybe there's some compatibility issues we need to talk about.
Or you can communicate about it and see if-
That's right.
That's exactly right.
Like, hey, you know, look, I have needs. I'm in a relationship because I want people to contribute
to these needs. Like I'm going to be fine no matter what, but I'm in this relationship because
I actually love the idea of someone else, you know, contributing to my wellbeing. So you have
to assess it and see if there's compatibility and alignment, not pointing the finger.
Because so often we're so ready to point the finger. Oh, this person is not giving as much
as me. Oh, it's like, no, no, no. If life is a mirror, what is the mirror reflecting? What is
a relationship reflecting? And oftentimes in my experience, relationships are the greatest teachers of who we are.
Right.
Who we are and who we aren't.
OK, like like and too often people run from difficult relationships.
Yeah.
I believe that you should whatever the lesson is you got to get about you before you break up.
Heal it within the relationship first.
There you go.
Because then you take that healing to the next relationship.
Yes. Heal it within the relationship first. There you go. Because then you take that healing to the next relationship. If your relationship is revealing your own brokenness and your issues that you got to deal with,
and then you're saying to the other person, oh, it's your fault,
that brokenness and that healing that you didn't do, you're taking it wherever you go.
Yeah.
That's going to be the constant.
You're repeating the cycle.
It's going to repeat.
So what should we do if we're in an environment of a relationship that is not working, that
people are being triggered and there's arguments and fights and frustration and you're just
not able to see eye to eye, you're not facing the same direction, we shouldn't say, it's
your fault, I don't deserve this, peace out.
No, no, no.
What should we do internally, whether we're with that person long term
or after three, six, 12 months, we realize this isn't the right fit, but I'm going out in a
different way. Yeah. So it goes back to the original question in this section, which was,
how do you love yourself? So there's a scripture that says that the whole Bible can be summed up in,
you know,
love the Lord God,
your God with all your heart and love your neighbor as yourself.
What does that mean?
This is so interesting.
A lot of times,
you don't love yourself.
You're going to love your neighbor with a lot of anger and frustration.
But this is why we see a lot of what we're seeing in our world.
Wow. And because we still focus on the neighbor part, but we don't focus on the self part. Love your
neighbor as yourself, right? So how can I love anybody well if I don't love me well?
So when we talk about loving somebody, and so often in relationships or dating,
we're in so often in relationships or dating we're looking to love someone we're looking for someone to love us but do you love you loving you me loving me comes it starts with appreciating who
i am flaws and all going easy on myself too often we are the people that talk to ourselves the worst.
Worst over and over.
Over and over. We would never let somebody talk to us as badly as we talk to ourselves.
That's not love. Love is like, it's okay. Yep. You know you've helped. Come on. Get up. You're
good. You're going to be all right. All right. What did you learn? What do you got to do
differently? It's a lesson. It's not an indictment. Loving ourself. We come to find out, well, what do we like?
What do I like to do? What are the things that contribute to my happiness?
And let me prioritize those things. When we love ourselves, we really start to appreciate.
We start to say, oh, man, you know what? I'm gonna be all right. I'm gonna be OK.
And so often we don't do that. We're looking for other people
to do the work for us that we're not doing ourselves. That's why there's always this
imbalance. That's why we can never really find contentment. Why? Because it starts here.
Prayer, meditation, working out, eating right. Whatever the things that contribute to your
happiness, you and I have to make a committee of one to do those things.
Period.
Whatever those things are that bring you peace, don't wait until your partner does it.
Don't wait until you get in a relationship to focus on it.
Do it now.
And one of the biggest challenges is that if you are already in a relationship or you're in a marriage and it has become so codependent that you don't do
anything unless they give you permission, you know, oh, you don't want to go work out. Okay.
I won't go work out today. Oh, you want to cook? Oh, let's go. Right. There's nothing wrong with
wanting to do things together. But what are the things that you like to do? Who are you?
What's in your heart? So before you point the finger, hey, this is not working and you're the problem,
everyone has to do a self-assessment and say,
well, okay, well, have I done my work?
Am I doing my work?
Do I love myself?
What should we assess in that process?
What are the things we should be asking ourselves?
The thing you should be asking yourself
when you are assessing who you are, one.
When you're frustrated in the relationship,
when you're fighting, you're arguing,
you're not seeing eye to eye. Oh, great.
You think they're the problem.
They're not understanding you.
What should we ask ourselves?
Well, first of all,
what am I actually frustrated about?
Let's start there.
What am I frustrated about?
What are the problems that I am having?
Because so often we don't even communicate with our, like, we're not
even clear, right? What the problems are. What are the areas of frustration? What are the problems?
And then before you go and try to solve it, you then have to ask, what is my contribution? Because everyone is making a contribution to the very problems
that they can't stand in their relationship. What is my contribution to this problem?
Correct. What is my contribution to the problem? Because once we, because it's so easy.
It's easy to point the finger, but it's really hard to point the finger back
at ourselves. It's really hard. And so before you start doing, Hey, you're before you start
doing this and you're not doing right. And you're wrong. And you're pointing the finger at whoever
you're in the relationship with. You start to do this assessment and say, okay, what's really the
problem? What's really what,, have I not been communicated enough?
Have I not set my expectations?
You know, have I been too harsh?
Like you gotta really start doing the assessment
of yourself
and then bring that conversation.
And I think also to go even deeper is like,
why is this triggering me?
Exactly.
Like, why is this a problem for me?
Yes.
Like, maybe it's not the other person's doing something to me, but the trigger of it is
something I haven't healed or addressed from the past.
Yes.
And that's when I'm triggered.
Yes.
But they're just being them, you know, depending on the situation.
But it's like, what's the root of this frustration for me?
Dude, this is so true.
And this is why I talk about this in the book. I talk about how expectations are the secret
software that run our life. And what I mean by that is that we don't actually sometimes react
to life events. We react to our expectations of events. So if situations or people exceed our expectation we're happy if
Situations or people don't we're devastated. So what should we do have no expectations? No, you can't do that because
Expectations are like blood pressure, you know too high. It's not good too low
It's not good because expectation we need motivation expectations are our hope right?
So we do have to have hope but we've got to it properly. Because so often when our expectation is not set to your point that you made, we end up
reacting based upon an unsaid expectation. And so it's not that what the person's doing is wrong.
It's that we have not set expectations for ourselves. We haven't identified what those
triggers are. We haven't identified, oh, wait a minute, wait a second.
They're not the problem.
It's how I'm looking at it is the problem.
So in order to set expectations,
I have every person that reads the book
ask these two questions.
One, is it realistic or unrealistic?
How do you know?
Comes down to one word.
This is how you determine if your expectation is realistic or unrealistic.
Control.
What do you mean?
Are you trying to be in control?
If it's within your control to do it, you can expect it.
It's a realistic expectation.
If it's out of your control, you cannot expect it.
So I'll give two examples.
Your podcast is amazing.
It's incredible.
One of the most dynamic podcasts in the world. Thank you. No matter how hard you try, you cannot force somebody to go
listen to it. No. Can't. I can hope. Hope. I can have a range of what I think people listen to.
Yes. I can have a target. I can have a goal. But if I put, you put a an expectation of like, hey, it's got to be a million by next month.
Right. I would argue that's unrealistic because it's out of your control.
Right. What's in your control? I want to produce the best podcast.
Yeah. With the best conversations and the best guests, with the best marketing and the best publicity.
All in your control. to expect now let's
apply that to people you're in a relationship yeah you know i want this person to love me in
a certain way i want this person to you know have have this amount of sex i want this person to to
go work out i want this person to go eat, I want this person.
Can't control that. You can't control it.
You can communicate it,
you can set up the structure for it.
But you can't control it.
And so often, our expectations with others are unset.
Why, because we're trying to control what we don't.
You and I only control ourselves and the remote,
wherever the remote, that's it.
I can't control anybody else ever. And too often we spend so much energy trying to get someone to behave and live in the way that we want instead of behaving in the way that we want,
right? Living the way that we want. And if we live the way that we want, right? Living the way that we want.
And if we live the way that we want, then whoever we're in the relationship with, either that is going to compel them to say, hey, hey, you know what?
I like what you're doing.
And then you say, hey, I like what you're doing.
So let's do that together.
Right.
Or it won't.
But when we try to get somebody to be what we want them to be and do what we want them to do
that's called manipulation what happens when we are in a relation when we are trying to control
or manipulate someone else in an intimate relationship or they're doing that to us
what happens um what happens is uh love goes down fear rises here's what i mean by that
fear rises. Here's what I mean by that. You, you, you, you, the fear of if I don't do this,
they're going to leave. So that person, you know, everyone has different degrees of self-determination.
And so in a relationship, when you've fallen in love and you really care about somebody and they're asking you to do something or be something, that could be a very compelling thing to do even when it's not who you are. And so the fear of if I don't, will they leave?
Okay. So then it becomes a performance-based relationship. It's not good. It's not good.
I'm doing this because I don't want them to go, but I know it doesn't bring me joy. So it's no
longer is love leading the way.
It's fear.
It's fear.
It's fear.
And okay, you know what?
I'm going to do this because this is what they want.
And I'm going to become this.
But every moment that I do it and it's not in my heart is a moment that my soul gets crushed.
Every single moment.
This is my life.
This is my life up until now where, you know, not all the time, but I could
see a pattern in my past relationships where I would just do things to make the other person
happy, even though I didn't want to do them because they were angry or upset or frustrated
or whatever. They had some expectation. And I would sense like, man, the love is going down a
little bit, a little bit a little bit
but I when I took responsibility and accountability I was like but it's not their fault I'm the one
choosing to do these things because I'm afraid that they're going to be angry at me or that
they're going to leave or they're not going to love me so it's my responsibility to stand in my
truth yeah in those tough challenging moments when someone's like, you don't support me, you're not doing, whatever they're saying, it's tough to do that.
We're triggered.
It's challenging.
But I think if someone's going to leave you by you standing in your truth and being frustrated
by you constantly, then that's maybe not the right fit for you.
Well, not only is it potentially not the right fit, you got to think about something.
You got to put yourself at the end of your life.
And you got to say. You posted a quote on Instagram recently about this.
Yes. I saw it. That's a good quote. One of the regrets, one of the regrets of the dying. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh yeah. That quote. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I really, I use that as a prompt to get people to think about in your life. But if you do that, so I, so let's say in that,
in that dynamic,
you become what they want you to be, even though it's not who you really are.
You get to the end of your life and can you live with doing what was expected, but never what was destined? Can you live with doing what was expected but never what was destined and if the answer that
question is no then you gotta make some changes so tough it is why does love trap us
because i'm speaking for myself yeah because i don't want to say the world does this but i i
sense a lot of other people do this when we feel the sense of chemistry and connection and intimacy
Yeah, and vulnerability and love whether it's real or not. We sense that feeling of intimacy with yes
Why does that trap us and we stay in these things in general?
I'm not speaking for everyone, but we tend to stay in these things
Much longer than we should things in general i'm not speaking for everyone but we tend to stay in these things much longer
than we should like you'll hear people say i knew i should have got a divorce seven years ago yeah
it's like they get they break up with a divorce i always ask them when did you know
that you weren't supposed to be with this person five years ago ten years ago the day i got married
right you hear these things and you're like well why do we stay right
why is it so hard for us this trap of love right why don't we get out of it sooner right i mean
there's so many there's so many reasons the reason that comes to mind uh is worth self-worth
we don't believe we're worth we or we're afraid we won't find something as good or what do you mean? All of it. What I mean is that it can take a while for you to come into a revelation of what you're
worth and that you are worthy to be happy and pursue happiness on your terms and come
to the revelation that this dynamic is no longer making that contribution to my life.
Not that they're bad and wrong.
There you go. Right, right.
Not that it's all their fault.
There you go.
It just wasn't the right fit.
And for me, you know, when you're in that situation,
it can take a long time for you to get to the place where you feel enough worth,
where you're ready to say, you know what, I'm going to endure the fear.
I'm going to endure the challenges to make that kind of move.
So when you talk about love, love cuts to the core of our worth because we all need it.
And when I say love, we all need love.
I don't mean just romantic love.
I'm just saying we all need to love and be loved.
I think it's just part of our humanity.
It's just part of how we were created.
It's part of our divinity, right?
God is love.
God is in us.
We love, right?
And we serve and so part of that love is
Oh, man, I want so much of his focus on giving because think about again think about how we're socialized
Right. Oh you do the right thing. Oh, mommy. Daddy loves you. Oh, you know, oh I wanna but it's not like, you know
Do you love you?
Do you know you're worthy?
Do you know that you are worth it? Do you love who looks back at you
in the mirror? Do you love who looks back at you when you take the selfie? Because at the end of
the day, love becomes complicated because we never actually get there with our worth in who we really
are. And so we go into the relationship and we haven't really done the work. We kind of feel worthy. We don't quite feel loved.
And we bring all of that. That's a recipe for this, you know, and here's the thing. It's okay.
Right. We're on love is, is, is, is, is like a Rocky C, right? You know what I mean? You want,
Hey, we're on the boat, man. It's going to be right. That's okay. Because we all have our stuff.
So it's not about finding somebody who don't have stuff. You want to find somebody who can help you with your stuff.
Who's willing to help you with your stuff. So that as you bring things that are difficult,
they're like, Hey, it's cool. Let's work, work this through. But you both find a healthy way
to do it. But one of the reasons why I think people stay in things is because of worth and
you need time to get to a place and some people never get there
where you realize what you're worth because at the end of the day you go back to happiness it's like
in peace and joy you know this we only live this life once you know i'm a christian i believe in
heaven i believe in that but i've also believed that this is this this earth this life this
particular existence we only get it once. So when you really put that
in the broad scheme of things, you think, okay, am I living right now according to my choice?
Am I doing the things that bring me joy, bring me peace, or am I allowing things in my life
that are working against it, no matter what they are. It could be a relationship. It could be a job. It could be a living environment. Whatever it is,
I have to take control and do this assessment and then make the decision,
okay, from a relationship standpoint, if my relationship isn't everything I wanted, okay,
what do I need to do to fix it? But first I got to fix me and I got to work on me and I got to
love me. And as I love me, it gotta work on me and I gotta love me
and as I love me
it will then help me learn
how to love others
and make the assessment
okay you know what
maybe this person is
gonna be able to
walk with me
and I walk with them
great
maybe not
but let me not just
point the finger
and do the work
the other thing I wanna hit
is
when you talk about
setting expectations
that second part of
setting expectations
is communication right is it spoken or uns hit is we talk about setting expectations. That second part of setting expectations is communication, right?
Is it spoken or unspoken?
We talked about this earlier.
You've got to actually ask the question.
So even in this situation, when you talk about a difficult relationship, this scenario,
instead of making the assumption, whatever your area of frustration is, sit down and frame it as a question.
You know what?
I was expecting that, you know,
in this relationship that, you know,
we would sit down every night at seven o'clock.
Right, because this is what we did with my family.
So I just assumed.
So I just assumed.
You would do the same thing.
Is that your expectation?
Is that something I can expect from you?
And let them say yes or no. Oh, okay. So
for you, like you don't ever expect to be home at seven. You're going out to dinner.
Right. Oh, okay. Got it. Okay. Okay. All right. Okay. Great. Wow. Now we're actually having a
real adult conversation, right? We have an adult conversation because we're taking accountability
and we're communicating. And so when it comes to setting expectations in any area of life, you got to know, is it realistic or unrealistic vis-a-vis control?
And you got to ask, is it spoken or unspoken vis-a-vis communication?
And when we start to do these tools, you know, it does free us up.
Because the reason why I wanted to write Live Free is because so often we're not.
Because so often we're not.
And when I say live free, what I mean is that when you and I live free, when anyone lives free, it means they are not under the mental, physical, or emotional control of anyone or anything.
That's what living free is.
Living free means, and so when we get into a situation and we start to feel like, ooh, this person is starting to feel like this person is making me mad or contributing to my discontent.
Then I would say to that person, OK, pause for a minute. Pause for a second.
It's super easy just to turn all your attention to what they're not doing. Right.
No, no, no, no. How do you want to feel in the situation? What will give you more power in the situation? What will give you more peace? OK. You know what? I'm identifying that there are some things in my relationship that are incompatible.
Yes.
I am going to spend some time observing what those things are and identifying if there
are certain things I can live with and what I can't.
Right.
And communicating about that.
And communicating those areas that I can't to see if it's possible we can set our expectations together.
The biggest challenge you'll find is when you communicate those things out of expectation or anger or frustration, the other person is probably not going to be able to receive it.
If you're already making someone wrong for what they're doing or not doing, it's very challenging to have an adult conversation.
Bro, I've been there before. I've done that and i've received it yes and uh oh it's it's
challenging to do but when you come from a place of 100 responsibility accountability and figuring
why is this triggering me why is this really affecting me dude then you can come from a calmer
place of like okay i didn't like this but i don't need to make you wrong for this in this moment.
Because we can talk about it, come up with an agreement that then moving forward, we can either live up to or not.
And then we can make a decision if this frustrates me.
Correct.
I mean, it's challenging, but it's good work. And for me, you know, I that's we talk about flaws.
Like that's an area that I have been, you know, outside of identifying what my needs are and being OK to admit those needs.
One of the flaws, man, is that, you know, I have a really strong sense of right and wrong.
And if someone's not doing that, according to me, that's wrong.
Right. Right. So so if some may have right, dude. I'm like, that's wrong.
You know, so when Megan and I have had moments of disagreement, you know, I have at times mishandled it completely because I have in my mind made the decision that on that particular thing that she may have done that I didn't like.
She's wrong. Yeah. For you. For me. Right. But no, no, no. I didn't. For me came as I evolved and as I grew. Initially, it was like, no, that's wrong yeah for you for me right but no no i didn't for me came as i evolved and as i grew
initially it was like no that's wrong yeah wrong in the world not just wrong for the wrong in the
world so here's the problem with that the problem is when i make the decision and judge her action
as wrong the moment i bring it up i bring it up in a way of attack
and anyone when they feel attacked it's gonna they're gonna get defensive you can't do that
in relation you can't do it you can't do it but but it happens all the time it does man and dude
what would happen is i would you know get on my self-righteous you know uh a soapbox i can't
believe we did this there you go there you There you go. What were you thinking? There you go.
Judgment,
you know.
What's she going to say?
Oh,
you're right,
Devon.
I'm a bad person.
Everything you say is truth.
Right?
No,
dude,
listen,
I learned the hard way.
What that did was it pushed her further away.
Right.
It doesn't mean that the point of what I was bringing up,
whatever we were dealing with,
didn't have merit.
Didn't mean that. It just meant that the way I went about it was wrong.
Right.
And my intent was not being realized because I came at it from judgment and I'm right and you're wrong and da, da, da, da.
So as I bump my head, I realize, oh, got it.
The way I see the world is the way I see the world. It's not exactly how the world may be.
So when I use how I see the world as the way that she has to see the world,
I am the one with the problem because I've got to understand and take into account the two
different perspectives. So what I had to learn to do is express it from here.
My love.
When this happened, here's how it made me feel.
Here's what's my takeaway.
Is that the right way to think about it?
So instead of doing like this, I had to do like this.
Oh, yeah, when you said that, I felt this way about that.
You know, man, how can we, you know, and that approach, bro, that approach is what then brings the communication.
Right.
Then she wants to be contributing in a more supportive way.
And also just talk it through, right, because it's not a pointing the finger.
I'm not pointing the finger at her.
You know, she's not pointing the finger at me.
We're actually talking about it.
So she'll say, hey, you know, there are certain things that you do that make me feel this way. I was like, okay now here's another hard truth
There's some situation I'm like I'm not responsible for those feelings right doesn't mean you have to change who you are no
I mean, I I love you. I understand what you're saying and you know, I love you a period
I understand you feel a certain way about certain things. That's not my responsibility. Right? So the same way that I feel about certain things,
you're like, Hey, that's not my responsibility. Right? I still got to go do my work. I still
have to go on my journey and I still have to continue to get to that place of peace and
healing and contentment inside the journey, if that makes sense. On a scale of one to 10 of jealousy, 10 being extremely jealous
human being, one being not jealous at all, where would you say you lie? In life or like relationship?
In relationship. Oh man, I'm not jealous. I'm lying. It's like a one for me. Did you ever used
to be jealous in relationships? Never. And I'll tell you why because I love me okay right so I'm
like yo listen I ain't jealous and no other dude I ain't I'm not and and in
the reality is if any woman that I was with found you know for whatever more
comfort or or you know it's like hey I want to go over there and experience
that person god bless you
god bless you we're not the right fit not the right fit yeah you know and and if i was a
jealous person i couldn't be married to my wife you know my wife is one of the most successful
i mean first she's beautiful but she's also one of the most successful you know women uh you know
actors in hollywood you know she's an icon she's known around the world you
know i mean she's got men she's got men you know i mean literally you know and men all around the
world uh you know desire her and would probably do anything for her and that's who she was before
we got married so if i was the jealous type all the work i couldn't i'd be miserable miserable
miserable because right now she's in New York on a TV show.
I'm here in L.A. I have trust and got to have trust. Right. So if I'm a jealous man.
Oh, man. What is jealous? He's saying about us. Insecurity. Massive insecurity.
I don't feel safe with me. So I don't feel safe with you.
I mean, what do you mean? I don't feel safe with me., if I am secure with who I am and I feel good being alone, right?
I feel safe in my isolation.
I feel safe in my loneliness or periods of time when I'm by myself.
Then I trust that you're going to feel safe and you're going to honor whatever needs to happen.
But if I don't feel safe, like I don't really like being alone much and I don't really like being by myself, then then you don't feel what are you doing?
What's the problem? What's happening? So that insecurity and not feeling safe with self, you transfer on to the other person.
Because if you're content with your personal time, you tend to be more content when others have personal time.
You're not worried. You're not worried. You know. And then also one of the things that could happen is that you got burned in the past.
You know, someone did you wrong, they violated your trust.
And so fear has crept in.
And so that fear is driving your jealousy.
Yes.
You know, I'm afraid that what happened before
is gonna happen again.
And so as a result, I'm transferring that previous pain
onto my present situation.
And that's always a recipe for disaster, right?
Because the person you're dating is not the person you dated
Can expect them to repeat the same thing exactly now, but here's the other thing because life is a mirror
Right and whatever we put out we get back
If you keep putting that out if you put it out on the last situation
This person you're dating may not be a cheater at all
but if you don't trust them and you keep getting mad you're gonna push them away they're gonna
want to cheat it's it's like you know again everyone still has to be the keeper it's okay
yeah right but that energy that you're putting out is sometimes the energy you get back even
from somebody who may not be predisposed yeah to do those sort of things not saying it's your
fault that someone correct up their integrity.
Correct.
But you might have influenced them in a way.
Correct.
And so the person that's jealous has to, one, get control of that security,
and two, get control of that fear.
And also, also, say, you know what?
Listen, if that person I'm dating is foolish enough to step out on me.
That's on them. That is on them. That's all that because they don't even realize what they just did.
They realize what the who they're missing out on. Right. Period. End of story.
That's it. So. So on the other side of that jealousy is is this idea that's not ideal in your head that's just not true.
So I feel like maybe until five or six years ago, I was probably, in my 20s, I was probably a seven
on the jealousy scale. Whoa. Then in my, I was very insecure. I had false confidence,
were very insecure. Yep. Maybe I was like a five into a seven in that range. And then in my 30,
early 30s,
I was more of a three.
Right.
And then when I hit 30,
probably three or 34,
I was like a one or a zero.
Mm.
And something switched inside of me
where I was like,
okay,
exactly what you just said.
If someone cheats on me
or is flirting with someone
or whatever,
texting someone, that's on them. Yeah. It'sats on me or is flirting with someone or whatever texting
someone that's on them yeah it's not on me and okay goodbye like i love you and i want the best
for you right and i don't know if that just took me time and maturity but you it sounds like you
had this at birth i don't know if i had it at birth jealousy was never my issue yeah you know
i was never i've just never been the jealous, the jealous type at all.
You know, what was your biggest issue?
My biggest issue has been and continues to be vulnerability.
Being vulnerable.
Very, very hard.
Very hard.
Expressing what I feel.
Why is it challenging for you to express exactly how you feel in a vulnerable, non-frustrated way?
I'll tell you why.
Because I go back to, you know.
Mr. Perfect?
Mr. Perfect, for sure.
I mean, that area of time, that period of time, you know,
that wound, you know, losing my father, you know,
this is devastating.
I mean, you know, it was, and I talk about this in the book.
You know, when my father, so my father was an alcoholic.
He was in and out of the house pretty much my whole life. And so when we would see him, most of the time, my memories of
him were, you know, him being drunk. So he was like, I think when we were, and I was like, man,
maybe five years old, he left and, you know, was just out, like for him,
alcohol was like somebody being on like hardcore drugs.
And so he was intermittent for,
from between five and nine when he passed away.
Right before he passed away, he'd gotten clean.
He got a job, he had a place.
We went and saw him, you know, we were like,
hey, he's like, hey, you know,
he worked at this restaurant.
Remember we went to the restaurant multiple times.
On a Sunday night, we got the word that he had a heart attack.
He went to the hospital.
That Monday after school, me and my brothers, my mom, we go to the hospital.
We see him.
You know, he's up in the bed just like this, having a conversation.
You know, and he said, listen, I'm so sorry for what I've done to you all.
He said, I want to get back in your life.
I want to get my family back.
Wow.
I'm coming back to church. He said, I wanna get back in your life. I wanna get my family back.
I'm coming back to church.
That's what he said.
We were like, wow, okay, maybe dad has changed.
The next day, we're getting ready to go to the hospital.
The phone rings, mother picks up, hear this screech.
This yeah, you know, I'm nine years old
and I was literally sitting on the couch
reading the Shel Silverstein book where the sidewalk ends because we were reading that for
class. My mom yells and we knew what that meant. She's crying profusely. She rushes. She gets us
in the car. We go to the hospital. One of my aunts is there. She is with us in the waiting room.
My mom goes away for a long
time and then finally she comes and she says to me and my brothers i want you to come with me
didn't know where we were going we go what i now realize was the morgue and there's my father
wow laid out on a cold you know steel And she said, kiss your father goodbye.
Wow.
So we walk over, man.
And I'm telling you, you don't,
you don't know what cold is until you,
it's the cold of the dead body.
So I remember to this day kissing him on his forehead.
And in that moment,
I'm like, what the heck is this?
I don't, I don't, I don't know.
I don't know how to, I'm feeling stuff
I don't even know how to deal with.
So I'm just gonna shut that down.
All the emotions.
I'm shutting it down.
I can't survive like this.
I'm shutting it down.
So, you know, hey, I'll lean into Mr. Perfect
and all these things.
And so as I, and so as that achievement started, you know,
I mean, from that age, you know, I'm just going to drive. I'm going to, I'm going to put all my,
my focus on succeeding and I'm going to get straight A's and I'm going to do this. I'm
going to be on student council and I'm going to play basketball and I'm going to do, I'm just
going to work my way out of, so I never have to focus on how I feel, never have to do it.
So as I did that, you know, again, in the public,
it was like, oh, successful.
You know, successful at school, successful at college, all this.
But where I failed the most was in my personal relationships
because I couldn't express how I felt.
Okay, Devon, you've taken me out on a date, but how do you feel?
No, I'm good.
I'm good.
No, no.
What's going on?
Like, how do you really feel? Like, you know, like what, what are you thinking? Oh no, I'm thinking great.
No, that vulnerability, man. It was like a lock. And, and, and as I've been married,
you know, I've had to, even to this day, work on expressing the things that are hard to express
and not want to talk about a problem.
You know, it's easy to talk about problems. Oh, I don't like this. That's easy. But like,
oh, this makes me feel really good. I really like when you do that. You know, I really love this.
Here's what I really feel about it. I'm really afraid about that. You don't say those things
as frequently as you like. I don't say those things as frequently as I want to. And I realize
especially, you know, with us being in the position that we are to be able, we've been
blessed to be able to help people. The only way that we can continue to grow in that help is to
grow here and to grow in that vulnerability. And that's something, man, that I work on because
in some instances, man, it feels very uncomfortable, really uncomfortable. It like it's it's it's easy i can i can stand up in a stadium
full of 20 000 people and speak much easier than sometimes one-on-one me telling you know my wife
how i feel about certain things and that's powerful powerful uh reflection and something
that i've learned personally over the last i was a lot of that until eight years ago
Hmm and man the moment I started to be vulnerable. It felt like I was gonna die. It felt like
Doesn't it like oh god
It felt like I wanted to I don't know run away every time that I was about to be vulnerable
I was like the world going to make fun of me. No one's going to love me. If I show this vulnerability, people are going to laugh
at me. My business is going to suffer all these things. And it's been an eight year practice of
being vulnerable consistently in every episode, any, any moment that brings vulnerability,
not shying away, but leaning into it i'll
tell you what it gets easier it gets easier i haven't mastered it but it gets easier that
and uh i just remember the first time talking about some dark stuff i was like i want to die
right now i want to die like it felt like so uncomfortable yeah but i was like i don't want
anyone to look at me the rest of my life wow dude. Dude, I know that feeling. I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know.
Dude, I know the feeling.
Especially when someone you're intimate with and you love, you feel like you want to run away.
You know, I mean, you know, definitely it's gotten easier, but I'm not at that, at the point, at the Lewis Howes point yet.
I would give you, I would give you.
I want to get there.
I'll give you a challenge.
Please, I'll take it.
I'll give you a challenge.
Give me the challenge.
And I know you're the busiest time of the year probably right now. Yeah, it's crazy. Launching movies, launching
a book, all these opportunities. I would take
10 minutes a day for the next 30 days with your wife or someone in your life,
someone you care about. It doesn't have to be your wife every day, but someone in your life,
a conversation where you open up and express your feelings in a very
vulnerable way.
And you say, I'm dropping full guard.
It's going to be 10 minutes.
Then you can move on.
But you do 10 minutes a day with someone where you do real talk.
Phones are aside.
You say, you know what?
Whatever it is, I'm really afraid of this.
I want to tell you how I feel about this.
I want to share with you something I've never shared before with anyone.
Whatever it might be. And figuring out who it is to share what the thing.
Sure.
You know, you don't have to share your deepest secret
to a friend or something, but to your wife,
to friends, family, 10 minutes a day for 30 days.
I'd love to see-
The vulnerability challenge.
I'd love to see what you create from it,
because it's going to be extremely uncomfortable.
Ooh, man.
But as you know, when you lean into that uncomfortable
moments, like on the other side of it,
you're gonna feel a lot more natural and discomfort.
No, I love it.
I mean, first of all, you know a great challenge
when it's like, I'm like, yo, that's challenging.
You're like, I don't wanna do that.
That means I shouldn't do it.
Exactly, I'm like, oh, bro, man, that's deep.
If you literally scheduled on the calendar
10 minutes a day with each
person you wanted to talk to. And maybe it's your wife
every day or maybe it's a friend or whatever. It could be a
colleague, a business partner. Wow.
That's good. I think it'd be powerful. For anyone
at home listening or watching, I challenge
you. And if you're down for the
challenge, think about it. I'm down, man.
Think about it. You down? I'm down to do it.
Because I'm going to text you in 30 days. I'm going to text you in a week, every week for 30
days. I'll let you know when I'm starting. I'll be like, all right, bro, here's day one of 30 days.
Here we go. Okay. All right. Perfect. Because I want to hold you accountable when you're ready.
Hold me accountable. Because that is so hard, but I'm open to it, man. I'm open to it. Because
honestly, that's why I wrote this book. It's about living free. I want to live free. I don't want my vulnerability or lack thereof to control me.
Here's a question for you. You've been married. When did you get married? What month?
June.
June.
So it's almost 10 years.
Almost 10 years.
Or is it nine years now?
10 years in 2012.
Okay. So it's nine years.
Excuse me. 10 years in 2022.
Yeah. Gotcha. So it's almost 10 years.
And how young are you?
I'm 43.
43.
So let's imagine 54, which would be 20 years.
Yeah.
If all goes planned that way.
Yeah.
Let's say you're 20 years married and you're 54. what would 54 year old Devon say to 44 year old Devon about what he was proud of you for doing
oh and what you should let go of for the next decade oh wow that's deep proud of you for taking
on which helped you get to that 54 year old state, which is wherever you're
going to be. And the thing that wish you would let go of now so you can get there faster.
Okay. So the, the proud of would be, you know, I think just taking on this work, you know, like
taking on the work of, you know, not running from your
problems, you know, figuring out who you are, you know, committing to that path, doing the work,
you know, learning to love yourself. Like, you know, you've taking on that, you know, now,
you know, that 10 years from now, I think that my 54 year old self will be like, man,
that's really been great. I think the thing that he would say that I need to let go of, right.
Is like, how do you put it, man?
There's still a lot of, at times, you know, I'm ambitious and, and that angst.
That wanting more, that creating more.
You know, like, I want a bill. Let's go wanting more, that creating more. Me too, man.
I want a bill.
Let's go.
Bill, let's go.
You know, like, come on, every day.
And so I think that he would say,
if you would have let that,
nothing wrong with having ambition,
but doing it more from this standpoint.
Stop doing this. Let it come, you know, stop doing this,
let it come to you. Stop forcing. Yeah. And, and, and they're not, not, it's, it's not,
it's not always just the forcing, but it's, but it's also the, if this doesn't happen, then,
then, then that won't happen. It goes back to expectations. There you go. And if that don't
happen, then this is what that means. And I'm not worth it. Right. Which is not true. So he would say, you know,
I wish you would let go of that sooner.
Because the sooner you let go of all that angst
about who you are and your ambition,
the more things are just going to open up for you.
You know, because again,
that programming of Mr. Perfect and I got to do it.
It's something, I'm killing him, you know,
but that programming is still there.
It lingers every day.
It lingers, man.
So I think that my, you know, 10 year old,
you know, 54 year old self would say,
you know, that's the area that you need to
have let go of sooner because that's an area
that still trips me up right now.
Yeah.
And when do you feel the most loved?
Man, that's a great question.
I feel the most love when people just do random, just small acts of consideration.
That's when I feel most love.
I feel most love not like when, you know, it's the times when you would express love.
But those moments when, you know, it's just a random day and there's just little things to let you know it's it's the times when you would express love but those moments when you know
it's just a random day and there's just little things to let you know hey man i'm i see you
man dude i just want you i just did this to you for you right you know because uh i know you're
working hard you know i just want you to know hey i'm thinking about you yeah whatever whoever
however it comes those are moments when i feel the most love. I'm like, wow, that's deep, man.
When's the moment you felt the most loved
that you're allowed to share in your marriage
and in your relationship?
Wow, that's a great question.
Man, Louis, you're coming with questions, boy.
Man.
I'm like, dang, bro.
Not the school of average, man.
Man, no, no, no, shoot. It's gonna. Not the school of average, man. Man, no, no, no.
Shoot, it's going to be called the school of vulnerability.
Exactly.
Forget greatness, man.
Greatness is vulnerability.
This is true.
There you go.
It's part of it.
You can't be great, I don't think, without tapping into that as well.
You can't be great without being fully vulnerable.
One of the times I felt the most loved would probably know, would probably be, you know, I just go back to when you said it.
I mean, there have been other times, but the time that comes up the most is when, you know, we first got married, you know.
And, you know, I just I just remember that it wasn't like a specific gesture, you know.
It was just like, oh, wow.
You know, like I'm the middle child. I was the was the last kid in my last of my brothers to get married and so i i did have some doubts around you know love
and if that was going to happen for me and um you know and when megan and i started dating
you know it really was just like oh okay like oh. You know, I can just be who I am and that's enough.
You know, I don't have to perform, you know?
And so I think that that feeling of love
is something that has resonated till today,
where it's just a general like,
hey, I accept you for who you are,
you know, and that acceptance, you know?
So it's not like, oh, you know,
she bought me this or she did that.
It's a general acceptance of like,
you, who you are right now is
enough that's yeah yeah that'd make anyone feel loved i feel like yeah being accepted for who you
are absolutely not being wrong or made wrong for who you are right right do you feel like speaking
of weddings do you feel like weddings set us up for failure in marriage?
Absolutely.
The performance, the everyone comes, the celebration, this is the greatest day, the hype of it, the year buildup, and then you go into day-to-day life.
You never recreate that.
It, I don't, I don't, whoever, I mean, I feel like.
Let's spend as much money as we can on one night.
What?
And then always think about that.
Always think about it.
Look at the pictures.
And then that's it.
And be like, oh, but he's not doing this for me or she's not doing this.
Right, right.
And I'm like, whoever created the weddings, man, it was like, you know.
It's a great night.
It's a great night.
It's a great night.
Yes. So I talk about this in the book that that I talk about a portion of it.
I say that most people don't realize that wedding vows are our expectation agreements.
So so you're you're setting the tone for what can be expected, you know, through richer or poorer, through sickness and hell, you know, to death do us part.
Right. So you're saying you don't even realize, oh, so this is what this person can expect
from me.
But we don't actually then negotiate the finer points of what that means.
It's like, I can do whatever I want to do.
Right, right.
And you got to live with it.
There you go.
It's like, no, no, no, wait a minute.
Hold on a second.
Is that what I was agreeing to?
Right.
Right.
But the wedding itself is a performance.
And don't get me wrong. Like, I think that there's a version of how it could be done. Like, in all honesty, I would advise people get married, you know, privately and then celebrate. Right. Like, you know, say, hey, we're going to we've done this. We did it. We, you know, privately, personally. And then we're families together to have a good time. But that wedding day, man, creates so much
expectation in a fantasy that, that sometimes if you don't, if you don't literally like that
fantasy can be a cloud that hangs over the whole marriage, right? Because it's like, oh man,
you know, everybody looked perfect and beautiful and amazing. And then you get in the day to day
and you're like, it ain't nothing like that. So you can put it in its proper context. I, you know, everybody looked perfect and beautiful and amazing. And then you get in the day to day and you're like, it ain't nothing like that.
So you can put it in its proper context.
You know, but I think, again, the fantasy and we talked when we started talking about the myth, right?
The myth of marriage.
So much of it's romanticized through the wedding, you know, through the ceremony.
And this is going to be like this forever.
This is going to be like forever and everyone's going to,
you know,
be so happy.
And that's the other thing
that's so crazy
is that so many people
want to rush singles into that.
Oh, man.
And it's like,
no, what do you,
what do you do?
Why are you rushing?
Why are you pressuring someone
into this?
Like, no,
take as much time as you need
before you make the decision
to get married because you then have to be accountable to somebody else.
And that accountability and that sharing of your life comes with expectations.
It comes with compromise. It comes with sacrifice. And those are things to not rush into.
You want to make sure if you're single that you are going into marriage on your terms. Not because your family is pressuring you.
Not because your friends are already married.
Those are terrible reasons.
Not because she or he is pressuring you.
That's right.
That's not because they're pressuring you to get married.
Or else they're going to be angry at you.
There you go.
Don't do that.
No, you're doing it because it's what you want to do.
Because you are living free and you are choosing this as the next evolution of your life.
Yeah.
It's tough, though, when everyone's pressuring you.
Right?
It is.
But you know what?
Again, this is how you think about pressure and that type of pressure.
So you go shopping.
Right?
Everybody goes shopping.
You go shopping.
And you're trying a lot of stuff.
You know, you hear people be like, oh, try that on.
Try that on.
It looks great.
It looks great.
It looks great.
Right? And everybody's saying, oh, yeah, on, try that on. It looks great, looks great, looks great. Right?
And everybody's saying, oh, yeah, get that, get that, get that, get that.
And they go ahead and they're like, oh, okay, yeah.
So I should wear that?
I should get this?
Okay, great.
Yeah, wonderful.
So all these clothes that you have just tried on, now they're at the register.
And then all those people leave the store.
And there you are.
Do I really want these things?
But you're going to have to pay the bill.
Yeah.
You're going to have to pay the bill. Yeah. You got to pay the bill.
And do I want this thing right now?
Yeah.
So everybody that pressured you to try all this on, they're gone.
Oh, man.
They're gone.
They went on to their lives.
And you got to pay the debts.
You got to pay the debt.
Wow.
You got to deal with what you just bought.
So when you think about marriage, if you're getting that kind of pressure, you got to
ask yourself,
at the end of the day,
I'm going to be responsible for this.
And if I acquiesce to the pressure,
whoever is pressuring me,
they're going to go live their life and you are going to be stuck
dealing with the repercussions of a decision
that you did not exercise full control over.
Is there, how many people do you think have marriage remorse?
Like buyer's remorse?
How many married couples have that
like a day or a week later,
like, oh, I really didn't want this?
I think it's more than people know.
Because it could, we go back to expectations.
There's this expectation that marriage itself
is going to make you happier. Yes, it's not. It's not, it couldn't. We go back to expectations. There's this expectation that marriage itself is going to make you happier.
Yes, it's not. It's not. It doesn't. It doesn't. If anything, marriages reveal how much more work you need to do.
Man. So unless you are ready to do that work and you're ready to take it on, sometimes marriages can actually inflame dissatisfaction because you have to then face you. That's one benefit of
marriage is that you have to face yourself. You, sometimes we run our whole life and then we finally
get into marriage and it's like, oh, so this is where I, this is who I am. This is what I'm about.
And so you've got to be willing to do that work. When you got married, what was the one or two
things that you realized oh
this is who i am or this is what i'm still facing um that i get to work on that you were like maybe
you're running from or you didn't even think it was having too much consideration for the public.
And I don't necessarily mean, you know, because we're in the public eye, I don't mean like the general public.
I'm just saying like the public of our families and other people.
I think that I when I was thinking of marriage, I was having a consideration about, oh, OK, we live this way or we do these certain things.
Thinking about how that would be perceived. And a lot of pressure. Totally.
But then so as I got into it, it was like, oh, no, it ain't got nothing to do with anything public. This is all personal.
The marriage, the quality of the marriage has everything to do with what happens between us and how we do that. Period. End of story. Everything that happens out there will only be an outgrowth of what happens here.
So kind of breaking that, that for me mentally, even thinking about others, family, anyone else giving that consideration.
No, let me give consideration to her. Let her give consideration to me and let's give consideration for the union. The other thing that was eye-opening,
and this may sound really kind of trivial, it brought me to a revelation that I'm an
individual. You know, like, oh yeah, I'm married, but I'm still me.
I'm still me.
I'm still me.
And I still have to do the things that make me happy.
That fill you up.
That fill me up.
You know, and that was, because again, I'm going into marriage thinking like, oh, yeah, we're going to do this together.
We're going to do that together.
We're going to do this together.
You know, and as some of those things that I thought we were going to do together didn't happen. Yeah.
And still don't happen. It's just like, I like those things or you don't like those things.
Exactly.
Then I was left to reconcile like, oh, I'm still an individual.
Okay.
Right.
So, okay, so we can't do those things together.
Does that mean I don't do those things?
But I want to do those things.
Does that mean I don't do those things? But I want to do those things.
So coming to a revelation, I'm still an individual, even inside a marriage.
It was a big it was like, oh, and it came with some pain.
You know, it came with some like frustration because I was like, oh, OK, right. OK, I guess I still have to, you know, live life. Right.
I still got to go on my journey, you know, and OK, if there's certain things that she doesn't want to do with me, you know, live life. Right. I still got to go on my journey, you know, and okay. If
there's certain things that she doesn't want to do with me, you know, and there are certain things
that I don't want to do with her that I have to be okay with her still doing those things. And she
needs to still be okay with me doing these things. And that, ma'am, that was, that was tough. That
was tough because again, the idea is like, oh, you know, you, you found your partner and, you know,
we're going to do everything together and we're going to go.
And it's like, not always.
Yeah.
But does that make it less than?
Does that mean that there's less love?
No.
What I've learned is that love expands when our capacity to accept each other expands.
Oh, man.
Gosh.
That's huge.
It is so easy to love someone when they fit your narrow definition of what they should do.
It's easy.
Somebody does everything you want.
I love you.
Right.
You're perfect.
You know everything I want.
There you go.
But can you love them the more they don't?
Can you appreciate them for becoming their full self? That to me is love. The more I
can accept somebody for who they are, the more I can really say I love them. Because if we accept
somebody for who they are, we're also accepting things that they do that we can't stand.
Let's just be honest. Right? And again, it goes back to living free. If I live free,
I got to give everybody else a chance to live free, especially in a relationship.
And that's where people get it mixed up. Even if someone is married to you, you don't control them.
They don't control you. They have to have the freedom to experience life and become who they
are, obviously within the confines of the commitment. And you have to have the experience to live life and experience that freedom,
obviously in the confines of the commitment.
With your agreements and everything, yeah.
Correct.
You know, this idea, you know, it's like singleness is taught like, okay, when you get married,
two halves become whole.
And that's like, but that's psychologically, it's like, no, two wholes, you know,
become three.
Right.
You know, you're bringing your whole self and there's a new entity but that but you're still yourself And so you have to service the entity and you have to also still service yourself, right and that love grows
The more you say, okay, you know what I accept I
Accept yeah, I accept I accept when you talk about, you know, God is love. God loves us through all of our imperfection, through all of our craziness, all of our, you know, madness, all of our up and down.
period so when we practice that kind of love right that's when we really because because going back to something we talked about earlier
if anybody really wants to heal in their life if anybody really wants to go to the next level
practice this type of love acceptance yes even if i'm even if it's time to let somebody go.
Right.
I'm going to do it in love.
Yeah.
Because I've realized that this doesn't work and here's why, because I'm doing this
and I'm going here and that's okay.
You've actually given me a great gift because maybe I would have never done this work if
I wasn't with you for this period of time.
That's true.
That's true.
And maybe you took me as far as I could go and I've taken you as far as you can go.
Right. And maybe there's another situation for both of us.
Right.
But I'm going to let you go or I'm going to move on in love.
I'm not moving on in hate. I'm not moving on in anger. I'm not moving on in bitterness.
It's love.
Right. Because I love you so much. I don't want to
contribute to your life in a negative way any longer. And I love me so much that I don't want
you to contribute to my life in a negative way any longer. But I'm doing it from a place of love.
If you really want to go to the next level, man, it's all about that.
That's it. It's true, man. I have a few final questions for you.
Yeah, please.
Let's say there's someone watching or listening who's single right now.
A lot of people it seems like are single in the world that want to find someone.
And they get caught in the trap of, oh, this makes me feel good and this person looks good on paper or I could see a future for us.
But they haven't gone through the mess with that person yet.
They're on their first date, first couple months, everything's fine.
What would you say are three questions that you should ask the person you're dating to
see if they're even potentially going to be the right fit long term?
Three questions where you would get the information if they were 100% honest with the answers.
You would get the information you need if this is a potential good workout.
Right.
Worth investing in.
Where are you going?
Yeah.
What do you see?
Right?
Like, so where are you going in life?
Like, I just,
what are you going?
Like, what's your destination?
Like, what are you pursuing?
What's your purpose?
That's the number one question.
Where are you going?
Because here's the thing.
Too often in dating and singles, the first instinct is about me.
I want to know, is this person right for me?
How do you determine that?
Instead of asking a selfish question, you want to know where they're going.
It's like an Uber, right?
You put in the destination
because you know where you wanna go.
You would never get in an Uber
that's going a place you don't wanna go.
So the first thing you do when you get an Uber,
you say, hey, are you the right person?
Okay, yes.
Okay, great, so now I know I'm gonna go where I need to go
because I've checked that to begin with.
Too often, we're so worried, like,
does a person like me, do they care about
me? Before you even worry about that, are they going in the same direction? You know, what do
they value? So number one, where are they going? Two, you got to ask the question, what do you see?
So what is that about? You want to get into their head. What is their vision for their life?
How do you perceive the world or what do you see for your life?
What do you see for your life? What do you see for your life? Do you see yourself
married? Do you see yourself with kids? Do you see yourself living in this city or do you see
yourself moving to another city? What do you see? And then the third question
is what do you think about me? Interesting.
is what do you think about me?
Interesting.
Because those first two questions,
when you hear those answers,
you may not even ever need to ask the third.
Right.
Because you could decide,
oh, you know what?
This person's going in a direction that I don't want to go.
They're seeing stuff I don't see.
I don't need to ask what they think about me.
I've actually learned
that maybe this is not the right person for me.
Okay, cool.
But the third question, the reason why don't need to ask what they think about me. I've actually learned that maybe this is not the right person for me. Okay, cool.
But the third question, the reason why I reserve that
to ask yourself last is because you need to have
these other ones first.
And then you need to ask that person when you say,
hey, what do you think about me?
That's a vulnerable question.
But you need to know.
And just, man, in the dating situation in dating situation, it's people can hide.
It's so easy when you get infatuated with somebody to hide, right? And you don't ever want to ask,
you know, what do you really think? Because you're afraid if they ask, if you ask that question,
you know, the whole thing is up. Yeah. Cause they can say, well, you're a lot of fun, but I don't
really see this long term. You need to know that. Yeah. As soon as you start to have feelings for this person, you need to know that question.
Man.
Because then,
because then,
as a person who lives free,
you then can make the decision
if you want to continue.
Right.
So if you decide to continue,
this person says,
hey, you know what?
I only see this
as a physical thing.
If you have that information early,
then if you're,
as an adult,
you can make the decision.
Okay, you know what?
Fine.
This person sees it
as only physical. Fine. I will keep going. Or you know what fine this person sees is only physical I find I will I will keep going
or you know what no I don't want to do that but don't be afraid to ask the
question man don't be afraid where are you going what do you see what do you
think about me if you ask if someone's single right now ask those three
questions it's gonna change your dating life right now. Because there are people
right now that are watching this. They're dating someone who is manipulating them and they don't
even know it. Because they haven't asked the questions. Because they haven't asked the
questions. And the person they're dating, it's so easy to show up and say, oh, I love you and
think about you. But no, no. What are they really thinking about what's really going on?
And you're living in the expectation world.
If you're not asking the questions and communicating, you're having an expectation, oh, they're
hanging out with me because they want to be with me long term.
That's not true.
It's not true unless you ask the question.
Right.
And listen, listen, and listen, I've been married nine years.
Before that, I was single for a long time.
As men. As men.
As men.
Right.
In general.
Come on.
As if any woman watching this,
you better ask these men these questions.
Seriously.
And if you're a man,
you got to ask your woman some questions
because it's so easy to get into a situation
and then if they don't ask, then you don't tell.
Right.
So you could be with somebody for months and you're thinking one thing.
And if say, hey, well, if they didn't ask me, if we were, if we're exclusive, then.
It's not on me.
It's not on me.
Yeah.
It's not my fault.
Not my fault.
I'm just having fun hanging out.
We're just dating.
Just dating.
Yeah.
Right.
So, so any man, any woman listening to this, you got to start taking control of your life and asking the hard questions.
Why?
Because it's either cry now or cry later.
Or years of pain.
Yes.
And frustration.
Man, not only years of pain, but there's certain pain that's with you for a lifetime.
Oh.
pain, but there's certain pain is with you for a lifetime. You could have in a few months,
you know, ask some questions, got some clarity and made some decisions.
But if those questions were never asked and you're in that situation for years and it never was going to work, you could live with that pain for the rest of your life.
That's what's at stake, man. And so I would
encourage anyone, you know, start taking this seriously and ask the questions and whatever
someone says is a reflection of them, not you. Don't take it personally. Don't take it personally.
Yeah. Period. I mean, you know, I talk about this in the book.
There was a one of the only real time I got my heart broke was, you know, this one girl was dating.
And, you know, we I thought I thought we were going to get married. Right.
And let me tell you, it didn't happen. And I was devastated, man. I cried and everything.
I was like, oh, man, I can't believe this was years. I mean, you know, a decade before Megan and I even met.
And what I realized and at that time when I when that hurt, I felt rejected.
I felt less than, you know, I struggled like I'm like, wait a minute, you know, and deal with Mr. Perfect and vulnerability.
And I was vulnerable. It didn't work. And I was just like, oh, I don't know how to deal with this.
And so for years I internalized the breakup.
That it was an indictment on me.
I'm not good enough.
I am not good enough.
I don't have what it takes. I'm not lovable.
All of this I internalized.
And it took years for me to realize that was a reflection of her and where she wanted to go and what she wanted.
Nothing to do with my
adequacy or inadequacy. So if someone is dating and they're afraid of rejection, if that person
decides to move on, they're not being rejected. That person is deciding, I want this and that's
where I want to go. Don't internalize it. Don't take it in as if you aren't good enough
because it's not true. It's a reflection of what that person is going through, not an indictment
on what you are. Yeah. So hard to do, but hard. Set yourself free when you can do it. You do.
You got to live free. Yeah, man. Speaking of live free, people got to check out your book,
live free, exceed your highest expectations and
when I went through this it's really a book about setting expectations with yourself and other
people and making sure that there is no expectation that is unsaid yes you know because when we have
an unsaid expectation it's going to hurt you and the other person and the relationship absolutely
whether it be career business family intimate family, intimate, whatever it is.
Yeah.
Never expecting something.
And you break it down, give lots of examples, hide a lot of different pages that I really
liked.
Your expectations must be communicated.
And I love this quote that you added from Brene Brown.
Compassionate people ask for what they need.
They're compassionate because their boundaries keep them out of resentment.
Yes. And when we have those boundaries keep them out of resentment. Yes.
And when we have those boundaries,
we're not resenting other people.
You got that right.
You also say anything we suppress,
we empower.
Which I think is,
you know,
we empower that thing
to continue to live within us.
Yes.
And it takes over our body,
our mind,
our emotions,
everything.
We suppress that.
That's why,
you know,
I like to talk about sharing your shame.
And you don't have to share it publicly.
I love that.
But sharing it to a priest or a therapist or a friend that you really trust, sharing
that allow you to set that free and be more empowered, not by the shame, but by your purpose
and your mission moving forward.
So anything we suppress, we empower.
A lot of great stuff in here. I want
people to get the book, the pressure to live up to what isn't real. There's a lot of powerful
stuff in here that will help you in your life. It'll help you in relationships, but just whether
you're a single relationship or not, it'll help you in your life. So make sure you guys get a few
copies. My man, live free. Devon Franklin, you guys got to get the book it's powerful
couple final questions for you
yeah please
before I ask these final questions
people need to follow you
on Instagram
I love your Instagram content
oh thank you
you got to do more of the
maybe you just haven't seen it
in the last couple weeks
but you used to do a lot
of the
kind of praying
right to
oh yeah yeah yeah
I do it
I do it
it's been about two weeks.
But yeah.
Gotcha, gotcha.
I didn't see it recently,
but powerful stuff.
I love that stuff.
Devon Franklin over on Instagram,
Devon Franklin Twitter,
Devon Franklin official on Facebook.
But everywhere Devon Franklin,
check you out.
You got a bunch of other books as well.
Check out the other books.
A lot of good ones on relationships.
This is a question I've been asking people that I really respect and admire.
Okay.
So I'm going to ask you who are in seeming healthy relationships.
Yes.
You can only see from the outside what's actually happening.
Which is a whole other conversation about is there actually an amazing marriage out there that doesn't have challenges after a decade?
I don't know.
It doesn't seem like there is, even though someone could put something online, but behind the scenes.
Right.
Whole other conversation.
That's the next podcast.
Okay, okay, good.
What is the thing, the question I ask is, what is the thing about your wife that you love the most?
Oh, okay. It's a good question. That's probably an easy question. You know, I love her freedom.
You know, she has always been someone, you know, who always has prioritized her freedom in her
desire and commitment to be who she is and to live life, you know, in the way that she sees it and do it
on her terms. And, uh, and I love that, you know, because I, I haven't, I'm not, I haven't always
been that, you know, as, as we've been married, I've been shedding and working towards, you know,
living freer. Um, but she has always been someone who has done that. And I, I look at that and I
admire it, man. I admire that about her, just her ability to live her truth, to be fearless, to be free in that way.
You know, because, you know, again, I've gotten freer over the years.
But when we first got married, especially, you know, I was very like, you know, perfect.
Everything had to be like, hey, we got to get everything in order here, you know? Um, and, and that has some value to it, but, uh, I certainly wasn't free, you know, in terms of living my truth and just being okay with who I
am, no matter what people may think about that. Um, but she's always done that and I've always
admired that about it. That's cool. Yeah. It's good to know. Yeah. This is a question that you've
answered before, but I'm going to ask it again. It's called the three truths question. Okay. Um,
and if people want to hear the previous three truths, you have to go back.
We'll link up the previous episodes so you can see what you want to say. Right. I don't even
remember what I said in the last one. Exactly. Exactly. So this is a hypothetical scenario.
Imagine it's your last day on earth many years away from now. You can live as long as you want
to live, but eventually you got to turn the lights off. Okay. And you go to the next place.
And for whatever reason, you've got to take all of your written work,
audio work, video work with you.
So everything you've ever said,
this book, any book you ever have,
it's got to go with you to the next place.
Okay.
So no one has access to your content anymore.
But you get to leave behind three things you know to be true.
You take out a piece of paper
and write down your three truths,
which would be the biggest,
three big lessons you would share with the world that you learned.
This is all we would have to remember you by.
What would you say are these three truths for you?
I probably would repeat what I wrote and say it last time.
Oh, man.
Here's what I would say.
God is love.
Mm-hmm.
Faith works.
And Jesus saves.
Those would be the three things.
I like it.
I'm looking at the previous ones there.
Similar, but not the same.
Oh, okay.
So if people want to hear the previous three truths,
go check that out.
I love it.
Devon, before I ask you the final question, I want to acknowledge you, my man, for always
being real with me.
I love our friendship, even though we don't get to hang all the time.
Every time we come back on, I'm just like, man, I want to spend more quality time with
you.
I appreciate the effort and the energy and the attention, the detail you put into your
work, into your words, into your books, into the movies you make.
Everything you do is at such a high level.
And I really appreciate and acknowledge you for being an inspiration
and also for being real about relationships and your own personal relationship.
I think every relationship's got its own challenges.
There's different seasons of life with challenges.
And for you to be open about it, you know, in a respectful way is really inspiring.
So I acknowledge you for constantly doing the work yourself in marriage, in relationships,
and being open about it.
I think it inspires the rest of us guys.
Thank you, man.
Hey, we in this together.
We're in this together, man.
As my uncle used to say, who was my pastor growing up, he said, I'm just one beggar
telling another beggar where to find bread.
Hey, we all try to get a couple of crumbs, man.
Give me a couple of crumbs.
Give me some.
Yeah, give me some loaf.
OK, man.
Final question.
What's your definition of greatness?
My definition of greatness is.
Peace and proficiency. What I mean by that is when I think of those who are great,
they are incredibly proficient at what they do. And in the midst of that proficiency,
they're able to tune out the pressure and find the peace of their purpose and whatever that may be.
That when you really see the greatest of the great, they are extremely proficient and they have that peace in the midst of it.
And that's what makes them great and makes all of us say, wow.
Yeah. You know, one of the greatest of all time, obviously Muhammad Ali,
who's, you know, the inspiration to the world.
You look at his proficiency in the ring,
but then you look at his piece to say, hey, take the title.
I'm not going to compromise who I am.
And then the proficiency to get it back.
Right.
And the piece to tune everything out.
Everybody said he couldn't do it.
When I look at those who are impacting the world
in a great way, I see a combination of both.
Because you look at people and you say,
how can you be that proficient and that peaceful?
To me, that's greatness.
My man, Devon Franklin. Thanks, brother. Appreciate it, that's greatness. My man. Thanks, brother. Appreciate you.
Thank you so much for listening to this episode. If you enjoyed it, then make sure to share this
with a friend that you think would be inspired by this. Someone that you think this would be
helpful for them in their life, that would help them improve, give them a nugget, some inspiration,
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And you can do that by just texting one or two friends or posting it on social media.
Make sure to follow Devon Franklin over on Instagram and everywhere else.
He's a great, great guy.
I'm always inspired by his content.
So check it out if you want to be inspired as well.
Tag him on social media on your story when you're listening to this episode.
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And if you want more inspiration and motivation to keep you on track with your goals every
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leave you with this quote from Brene Brown, one of my favorite guests on the show, who said,
owning our story can be hard, but not nearly as difficult as spending our lives running from it.
It's all about owning who you are, what you've been through, not feeling guilt and shame,
but shining the light on the shame you've experienced so that it no longer haunts you,
so that it no longer makes you feel weak and scared and unworthy.
And I want to remind you, if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy,
and you matter.
I'm so grateful for you. and you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great.